Mississippi Turfgrass - Summer 2020

Page 14

FEATURE STORY

ALL FOR ONE

A superintendent discusses collaborating with professionals in other sectors of turf management and offers steps fellow supers can take to promote a united front. By Logan Freeman The following story was originally published in the June 2019 issue of GCM and is reprinted with permission.

W

hile there is no debating that the turf industry has come under increased attacks from activist groups and onesided legislation in the past few years, I believe there is a potentially dangerous gap in our defense. Though not often talked about, a lack of cohesion among the different professions within turfgrass management has left us isolated and separated. In the specific world of golf course management, we often discuss the importance of communication between the superintendent and golf shop staff, golfers, boards and committees. We also recognize the benefit of camaraderie and shared knowledge among golf course superintendents. Although the collaboration and community in golf is critical to the success of our work, the lack of communication and support across the various sectors of turfgrass management — golf, sports turf, home lawn care, university professionals, distributors, sales representatives — is rarely addressed. (Photo 1) The origin of this divide is difficult to pinpoint. Perhaps we superintendents felt that cultivating this long-term supportive relationship would have taken too much time and effort away from our immediate day-to-day operations. Or maybe we just saw no value in immersing ourselves in its complexities. Whatever the history, this disconnect now seriously undermines the future of our industry as a whole.

Fostering cooperation across the turf industry

An eye-opening gathering Like so many in our profession, I used to think that sports turf and lawn care just did their thing, and we as golf course turfgrass managers did ours. That’s the way it had always been and likely would remain. Then I went to a meeting for the formation of a local chapter of the Sports Turf Managers Association. This organic creation of the Mid-Atlantic STMA (https://mastma.org) opened my eyes to an entirely different approach to my profession.

1 14 • MISSISSIPPI TURFGRASS • SUMMER 2020

Sales representatives are among those who bridge the gap between the different sectors of turfgrass management. Here, author Logan Freeman, superintendent at Mountain Branch Golf Club in Joppa, Md., (right) and his assistant superintendent, Erik Dittmar (left), visit with Scott Orndorff, a sales representative from Landscape Supply Inc. Photos courtesy of Logan Freeman


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